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COLUMN





 Climate change rings an


 alarm bell; Deal with it



 limate change, as the world’s   ness. Such developments only add to the
 leading climate scientists have   woes of the country, where more than 270
 THE LAST   recently warned, is an existen-  million people continue to live below the
 World Bank’s poverty line of €1.90 ( 163)
 tial threat to the human race.
 WORD  C The earlier we realise and act   per day earning.
 on it, the better. The latest report by UN In-
 On financial front, India is among the top
 ABDUL WASEY  tergovernmental Panel on Climate Change   countries to face maximum economic loss
 (IPCC) – which suggests that after 2052 even   from climate change. According to a study
 a half degree increase in global tempera-  published in the scientific journal, Nature
 ture will lead to searing heat waves, heavy   Climate Change, India’s country-level so-
 rainfall, droughts, floods and other extreme   cial cost of carbon was estimated to be the
 weather conditions that will lower agricul-  highest at $86 per tonne of CO2, which
 tural yield, cause food and water scarcities   means that Indian economy stands to lose
 and push millions into poverty – must ring   $86 from emitting each additional tonne of
 an alarm bell for the policymakers.  CO2. This roughly accounts for nearly 21 per
 The problem is that we have been con-  cent of the global social cost of carbon.
 ditioned by unparalleled growth to expect   The country may face a far greater risk in
 that there are no catastrophes that are in-  terms of human costs and impact on devel-
 surmountable. We think even
 apocalyptic  science  fiction   India is among top
 deals with bands of survivors
 who, by definition, survive. Im-  countries that incur
 agining ourselves among them
 puts us in a passive mode. In   most losses from
 the real world, calamities do   climate change, and
 take a toll on one and all. The
 Kerala floods, which affected   the situation is only
 more than five million people   getting worse
 and killed over 200 in August,
 is enough indicator that climate
 change is already here. Cyclone   opment if nothing is done to curb its impact,
 Titli, which impacted more than   a major study has pointed out. As a lower-
 three lakh people in eastern In-  middle income country, economic losses
 dia, is yet another pointer that India need to   mean “crippling consequences” for future
 act fast.  development. An alarming number of peo-
 Sadly, India is the 13th most vulnerable   ple are now internally displaced every year
 country to climate change. Since more than   by extreme weather events and climate-re-
 60 per cent of its agriculture is rainfed and   lated disasters often losing their homes and
 it hosts 33 per cent of the world’s poor, cli-  their livelihoods, the report highlighted.
 mate change will have significant impacts   India, along with others, must make
 on the food and nutritional security. The   rapid, far-reaching and unprecedented
 country, according to the UN Office for Dis-  changes across sectors to stop the devastat-
 aster Risk Reduction, witnessed $79.5 bil-  ing consequences of climate change. Else, as
 lion in economic losses between 1998 and   per the IPCC report, the world won’t be able
 2017 due to climate-change disasters.   to meet its 2015 Paris Agreement commit-
 According to a study by the India Mete-  ment to keep the average global tempera-
 orological Department, India saw 285 flood-  tures “well below” 2°C.
 ing events between 1950-2017 that killed
 71,000 and drove 19 million into homeless-  LETTERS@TEHELKA.COM



 TEHELKA / 31 OCTOBER 2018  66  WWW.TEHELKA.COM


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